Euphorbia chamaesyce aka Crenated Spurge
Taxonomy ID: 12417
Common names
Crenated Spurge, Ground Fig Spurge, Least SpurgeMore information about Crenated Spurge
How big does Crenated Spurge get?
Euphorbia chamaesyce is a mat-forming annual that grows very close to the ground, with leaves reaching only 7–11 mm in length. It spreads prostrate across the soil surface, forming low dense mats rather than growing upright. Individual plants are typically just a few centimetres tall.
What varieties of Crenated Spurge exist?
Two subspecies are currently recognised. Subspecies chamaesyce has smaller, rounder leaves (under 10 mm) that are often untoothed with notched tips, and modest floral appendages up to twice the width of the gland. Subspecies massiliensis is more densely hairy, with larger leaves (to 10 mm) that are elongated and finely toothed, and more prominent appendages — often three-lobed — that exceed twice the gland width.
Can Crenated Spurge grow outdoors?
Euphorbia chamaesyce is an outdoor plant with no value as a houseplant. In its native range it occupies open, sunny, and often disturbed habitats: rocky hillsides, scree, gravel plains, sandy and saline soils, streamsides, lake shores, and roadsides from sea level to 1,600 m. It prefers well-drained to dry conditions and is adapted to poor, stony, or sandy soils. As an annual, it is not cultivated intentionally and is generally encountered as a weed of disturbed ground.
What pests and diseases affect Crenated Spurge?
Euphorbia species generally resist pest pressure through their toxic milky latex, which is highly irritant and deters most herbivores and insects. No specific pest or disease problems are documented for E. chamaesyce in the reviewed literature. Overwatering may predispose plants to fungal root rots.
What are the medicinal uses of Crenated Spurge?
Laboratory studies (2023) found that E. chamaesyce extracts have antimicrobial activity (strongest against Shigella flexneri, with a zone of inhibition of 18.1 mm), antibiofilm activity, and antioxidant capacity; the plant contains 6 flavonoids and 10 phenolic constituents. At the subgenus level, Euphorbia subg. Chamaesyce — which includes E. chamaesyce — is documented ethnobotanically for treating digestive disorders, respiratory complaints, inflammation, and injuries, though the subgenus is described by researchers as 'chemically under-investigated'. Traditional or clinical use of E. chamaesyce specifically is not well documented in peer-reviewed literature.
Is Crenated Spurge edible?
Euphorbia chamaesyce is not considered edible. Like most Euphorbia species, it contains a milky latex that is toxic on ingestion and highly irritant externally. No edible uses are documented for this species. The latex can cause vomiting, gastrointestinal upset, and severe irritation to mucous membranes.
How to propagate Crenated Spurge
Euphorbia chamaesyce reproduces by seed as an annual plant. Seeds are small (1.2 mm), ovoid-quadrangular, and pale grey. In natural settings the plant colonises open and disturbed ground through prolific seed production. No horticultural propagation information is documented, as this species is not cultivated.
What other uses does Crenated Spurge have?
No specific other uses (fibre, dye, building material, fuel, etc.) are documented for Euphorbia chamaesyce in the reviewed sources. The toxic latex characteristic of the genus is a known feature but is not recorded as being exploited industrially or practically for this species.
What temperature does Crenated Spurge prefer?
Euphorbia chamaesyce is native to Mediterranean and arid regions of Europe, North Africa, and Asia, where it tolerates a range of temperatures including heat and some cold. It grows from sea level to 1,600 m elevation in Turkey, suggesting tolerance of cool to warm conditions. As an annual, it completes its life cycle seasonally and does not require overwintering protection.
Does Crenated Spurge have a scent?
No notable scent is documented for Euphorbia chamaesyce. The small cyathia have yellowish to reddish glands and white or pinkish appendages, but no fragrance is reported in botanical descriptions.
What do Crenated Spurge flowers look like?
The flowers of Euphorbia chamaesyce are arranged in cyathia — the characteristic cup-shaped false flowers of the spurge family. Each cyathium features small but prominent white or pinkish petal-like appendages surrounding rounded yellowish to reddish floral glands. Fruits are only 2 mm long and may bear projecting hairs. Seeds are 1.2 mm, pale greyish, and ovoid-quadrangular with an irregularly bumpy surface.
How to prune Crenated Spurge
Euphorbia chamaesyce is a low-growing annual weed not cultivated for ornamental or horticultural purposes, and pruning is not a relevant care practice. If managing it as an unwanted plant, removal before seed set is the most effective approach. When handling any Euphorbia, wear gloves as the milky latex is highly irritant to skin and eyes.
When to repot Crenated Spurge
Euphorbia chamaesyce is an annual weed and is not grown as a container plant, so repotting is not applicable. It completes its life cycle in a single growing season in open ground.
How to clean Crenated Spurge
No specific cleaning requirements apply to Euphorbia chamaesyce, which is an annual weedy ground-cover plant. If handling the plant for any reason, care should be taken to avoid contact with the milky latex, which is highly irritant to skin, eyes, and mucous membranes.
Why are my Crenated Spurge leaves turning yellow?
Yellowing leaves in Euphorbia species generally indicate overwatering, waterlogged soil, or nutrient stress. As an adapted dry-habitat annual, E. chamaesyce is intolerant of prolonged moisture and prefers well-drained, sandy, or stony substrates. Excessive moisture around the roots is the most likely cause of yellowing in a container or garden setting.
Why are my Crenated Spurge leaves turning brown?
Brown leaf edges or tips in Euphorbia chamaesyce may indicate heat stress, physical damage, or extreme drought beyond the plant's tolerance. As a warm-climate annual of dry and rocky habitats, it is moderately drought-tolerant but can desiccate without any soil moisture at all.
Why is my Crenated Spurge drooping?
Drooping or wilting in Euphorbia chamaesyce is most likely caused by root rot from excess moisture — the plant is adapted to free-draining, dry soils. Alternatively, severe drought stress can also cause wilting. The plant's prostrate mat-forming habit means noticeable drooping is less conspicuous than in upright species.
Why is my Crenated Spurge dropping leaves?
Leaf drop in Euphorbia chamaesyce as an annual is a natural part of its life cycle at the end of the growing season. Premature leaf drop may indicate root stress, waterlogging, or extreme drought.
Why is my Crenated Spurge growing slowly?
Euphorbia chamaesyce is an annual plant that completes its entire life cycle — germination, growth, flowering, and seed set — within a single growing season. Slow growth in managed settings is most likely caused by insufficient light (it prefers full sun in open habitats), poor drainage, or cold temperatures.
How is Crenated Spurge pollinated?
Euphorbia chamaesyce produces small cyathia with coloured glands and petal-like appendages that attract insects. Pollination in the Euphorbiaceae family is primarily by insects visiting the glands of the cyathia. No specific pollinator data for this species is documented in the reviewed sources.
How difficult is it to take care of Crenated Spurge
What is the region of origin of Crenated Spurge
What are the water needs for Crenated Spurge
What is the right soil for Crenated Spurge
What is the sunlight requirement for Crenated Spurge
What's the right humidity for Crenated Spurge
How to fertilize Crenated Spurge
Is Crenated Spurge toxic to humans/pets?
What seasonal care does Crenated Spurge need?
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